The poster tagline: “It All Ends.” Promise? The trilogy went out with a whimper as “The Wolfpack” (Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis) head back to Las Vegas to rescue a kidnapped blah blah blah. . .. doesn’t matter. Put it this way: When you’re watching a comedy and find yourself feeling nostalgic for Mike Tyson’s way with a punch line, it’s time to turn out the neon lights.

Released and buried waaaaaay back in January, this cliche-ridden drama about the 1940s L.A. mobster scene never feels authentic. That's a disappointment. The fact that the film features cartoonish, career-worst performances from Sean Penn, Josh Brolin, Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone? That's a crime.

3. Stoker

There’s a fine line between a provocative, stylish thriller and pretentious art-house dreck, and this one crosses it. Nicole Kidman is the icy widow who lets her cold-blooded brother-in-law move in and care for her frosty daughter. The extended pauses and morose characterizations are so off-putting, audiences at one Sundance Film Festival screening walked out in droves. Those who didn’t were probably too lazy to crawl over the people sitting in their aisle.

It’s Valentine’s Day 2014. A seemingly pleasant romance from the writer of Love, Actually and the star of The Notebook pops up on your Netflix queue. Now, ever so gently, put down that remote right now!!!! Pedigree aside, this is nothing but a manipulative and bafflingly inept story about a guy (Domhnall Gleeson) who time travels — then promptly meets his dream girl (Rachel McAdams). Like you really need a heavy-handed sap-fest to tell you to enjoy life’s most precious moments?

Sorry, Channing Tatum! Still love you! But, wow, was this a bloated and hackneyed disaster — even by awful summer of ’13 standards. (Talking to you, Lone Ranger, 2 Guns, Smurfs and Man of Steel). Tatum is the security guard trying to protect the president (Jamie Foxx) from lunatics. Not a single shred of originality is on the agenda, other than a scene in which Tatum chats with a squirrel. Calling this cheesy fun just insults audiences. And cheese.